đŸ Archived View for library.inu.red âș file âș jacques-ellul-anarchism-and-christianity-en.gmi captured on 2023-01-29 at 11:14:32. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content
âĄïž Next capture (2024-06-20)
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Title: Anarchism and Christianity Author: Jacques Ellul Date: 1980 Language: en Topics: Christian anarchism Source: Retrieved on 4th May 2021 from https://www.jesusradicals.com/uploads/2/6/3/8/26388433/anarchism-and-christianity.pdf Notes: Published in Katallagete 7, no. 3 (Fall 1980): 14â24.
That anarchism and Christianity are the most irreconcilable enemies is
so established that it seems strange to try to reconcile them.
Anarchismâs war cry is âneither God nor master.â Anarchist thinkers have
made anti· Christianity, anti-religion, and anti-theism their
fundamental points of doctrine. While one could say that Marxâs atheism
(or anti-theism) is strictly subordinate since he deals with the
question by neglect rather than by intention, the âagainst Godâ is of
major importance to the anarchism of Proudhon, Kropotkin and Bakunin.
True, Marx analyzes religion at length and demonstrates that every
revolution must also be waged against religionâs particularly alienating
form of ideology. Nevertheless, this is not the essential direction of
his thought.
On the other hand it is self-evident that Christianity not only respects
authorities but also considers authorities to be necessary. Everyone
knows that Christianity is a doctrine of order! Certainly Calvin
considered any order to be better than anarchy, the most terrifying
transformation of a society. For Calvin the worst tyrant would clearly
be preferable to the absence of civil powers-a condition in which each
would become a wolf towards the other and the sin of each would manifest
itself against each and against all, without a single limitation or
check. That is, the belief of man as radical sinner completely
contradicts the idea of an-arché. [Ed. note. An-arché, from the Greek
arché the originating, primal or highest principle of order or
authority. Arché moved into English in words archaic, architect,
archangel, archbishop. The prefix an, in Greek and English, indicates a
negation or reversal or denial of the primal, originating or highest
principle of order or authority. An-arché is the absence or overcoming
of order or authority. In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries,
anarchism assumed a political reference, indeed, became a political
movement, discussed in this article.]
So there is rejection on both sides. For Christianity, a more determined
rejection of anarchism than of socialism, whatever its tendency (and I
do not have in mind only the idealistic, utopian. romantic socialism
that pleased many Christian thinkers so well). Scientific socialism. for
example, continues to attract Christians: it too is a doctrine of order
and organization. It seeks to attain justice. It cares greatly for the
poor. When it speaks of freedom it is a well-regulated freedom. If the
idea of the disappearance of the State is entertained by the extremists
itâs a minor point of doctrine-surely a small manner compared to the
great egalitarian transformation that has penetrated fully and easily
into the perspective of current Christian thought. The State will become
moribund later on, much later on, and so the doctrine of the
disappearance of the Stare is not bothersome to Christians.
Conversely, socialism is ready to accept a host of good qualities in
Christianity: love for others, search for justice, service, and the
importance placed on a social plan (and not merely an extraterrestrial
one). And socialists are ready to recognize Christians as brothers and
sisters on the road. âThose who believe in heaven and those who do not
believe in it ... ·â After all, people can do the same thing together
even if they have different faiths. It works for Christians too. It is
the theory of âpart of the road,â caricatured a little: â ... since we
both desire a society with greater justice. fraternity and equality, let
us travel together on the part of the road that leads to it. You see,
our faith in God is not bothersome; it has no influence at all on our
ideology regarding that society we work toward (which is the same as
yours), nor on the political means we use to attain it. We shall part
company afterwards, when we have achieved our objective, when we are in
that society. Then we Christians will reaffirm the importance of faith
in Jesus Christ.â
It is obvious that this arrangement is impossible between anarchists and
Christians. When anarchists make the destruction of religion virtually
the centerpiece of the revolution (without which no revolution is
possible), and the other cannot conceive of a society without
pre-established order strictly maintained...well, what can be done?
No doubt the current trend of atheist Christianity makes things easier.
If Christians have decided to kill God, one half of the journey is
finished. The anarchists have little to add, and should be quite
satisfied. The good prophet Jesus, pacifist and defender of the poor,
never bothered the anarchists. On the contrary! Christians today not
only abandon the hideous dogma of original sin-the radical evil which is
in us-but they construct another complete theology (if one can call it
that). This theology argues that the sole objective of the âGodâ
(so-called, but this âGodâ does not live) of the Bible is the Kingdom of
Humanity-the realization, accomplishment, blossoming of our potential.
This fulfillment is what, due to a cultural error, has so far been
called the âKingdom of Godâ.
That done, both parts of the journey are complete. Anarchists can accept
Christianity, and Christians can participate in anarchy. The curious
thing is that the connection fails to take place. This is because
neither Christians nor anarchism are attractive to each other, and
because today to be a socialist (or even a Marxist) and a Christian
raises few if any eyebrows (at least in France). Today no one thinks of
conjoining anarchism and Christianity.
I think there is a small complementary obstacle: for anarchism there is
still the Church. Although this is not a bothersome factor in the
relationship between Christians and socialists (one institution always
gets along with another institution; church and party: the same thing),
here it is a ânonconforming goodâ. [tr âobstacle redhibitoire, â a legal
term meaning a taint in a product which renders the sale null and void.]
It is true that some Christians are ready to make even this small
sacrifice. And we know that an important faction is doing everything it
can to destroy the Church by demonstrating that the Church is a wart on
early Christianity which, along the way, it deformed totally. But this
is not sufficient to reassure and convince the anarchists. It takes a
long time for a judgement like this to penetrate the mass audiences.
Christians see a much greater obstacle: politics. The Christians who are
engaged in the theological overhaul to which we have alluded are
politically Leftist, even extreme Left. But they do not really know what
anarchism is. About twenty years ago, a sociologist who was making a
survey of the political leanings of French Protestants and who knew
perfectly well that I was an anarchist classified me as a Rightist, not
far from the monarchists for that very reason. To theâgoodâ Left of the
Marxists, anarchists are false brothers, dreamers, unscientific people.
Indeed, Marx condemned Proudhon and Bakunin. Anarchists are Rightists
because they hold freedom as their pivotal imperative (freedom being the
virtue of the Right in France, perhaps elsewhere, since 1945). Anarchism
has gilded its coat-of-arms somewhat only to fall into Leftism and thus
be condemned by the serious Left. Organization is the mark of the
serious Leftist; it is the coherent tactic, which presupposes a chain of
commands. It is efficiency. How could Leftist Christians not accept
these criteria? Whereas anarchists ... No, disorder cannot suit
Christians, for how â does one separate anarchy from disorder? Thus,
rejected by both traditional and Leftist Christians anarchism remains
without any relationship to Christianity.
With the Christian abandonment of God, the Personal God, with their
reduction of Jesus to a historical model of humanity, with the advent of
the reign of Humanity, with their expansion of humanityâs power and the
suppression of the church, the final desolating thing is that nothing is
left of Christianity but the name of Jesus. I shall not engage here in a
theological debate on this affair. My refusal is not due to any kind of
traditionalism on my part. It is due to a lack of seriousness on the
part of those theologians who literally will say anything just to be in
fashion.
In what follows I would like to sketch another mode of rapprochement
between anarchism and Christianity which I believe will abandon none of
the biblical message. On the contrary, it seems to me that biblical
thought leads directly to anarchism, and that this is the only
âpolitical anti-politicalâ position in accord with Christian thinking.
One must first try to account for the critique against Christianity,
religion and the church brought by the anarchists of the nineteenth
century (resumed by twentieth century anarchists without being either
renewed or enriched!). Bakunin best summarized the question in his book
God and the State:
...God being everything, man and the real world arc nothing. God being
truth, justice, the good, beauty, power, life, man is the lie, iniquity,
evil, ugliness, impotence and death. God being master, man is slave.
Incapable of finding justice, truth and eternal life by himself, man can
do so only by divine revelation. But he who speaks of revelation speaks
of revealers...who will be recognized as Godâs representatives on earth
... and who of necessity exercise absolute power. All men owe them
passive and unlimited obedience, for no terrestrial justice can prevail
against divine reason. Godâs slaves, men are also slaves to the church
and to the state insofar as the state is consecrated by the church ...
Christianity has understood and realized this better than all other
religions. That is why Christianity is the absolute religion, and the
Roman Church the only consistent and logical one.
[Excursus: One clearly sees here the point at which Bakunin is
influenced by his cultural environment. What he reconstructs as a
deduction from the general to the particular is in fact the fruit of a
completely inverted process: the Roman Church is the support of the
State. He argues that it is the most authoritarian and anti-liberal
structure ever: this is what he gathers from history. He calls onâ
history to prove the accuracy of what he says about God. Therefore
Christianity (of which Catholicism represents the extreme) is
authoritarian and anti-liberal; and so are all religions, of which
Christianity is the most evident. And from thence he passes to the
Religion, and finally to what is the object of religions: God who is the
authoritarian master and the inspiration of the whole... That is the
development of Bakuninâs reasoning, which he inverts to make it
philosophical and justifiable.)
...The idea of God implies the abdication of reason and of human
justice; it is the most decisive negation of human liberty and
necessarily borders 00 roanâs slavery in theory as well as practice...
If God exists, man is a slave. Yet man can and must be free. Therefore
God does not exist. I defy anyone to get out of this circle .... The
contradiction is: they (Christians) want God and humanity. They
obstinately insist on combining two terms which, once separated, can
never meet again without destroying each other. In one breath they say
âGod-and-manâs-freedom, God and dignity, justice, equality, fraternity,
menâs prosperityâ without caring about the fatal logic by virtue of
which God is of necessity the eternal, supreme, absolute master if He
exists, and man is slave. Yet if man is slave, neither justice,
equality, fraternity nor prosperity are possible. They insist, contrary
to good sense and to all historical experiences, in depicting their God
as animated by the tenderest love for human freedom. A master, no matter
what he does and no matter how liberal he shows himself to be, is no
less a master. His very existence necessarily implies the slavery of all
who find themselves subservient to him. Therefore, if God existed he
would have only one means to serve human freedom; to cease to exist.
Loving human freedom, jealous for it, and considering it to be the
absolute condition for all we adore and respect in humanity, we quote
Voltaire and say, âIf God existed, he would have to be abolished.â
[Excursus: I must be precise and state that when I speak here of
anarchism I refer mainly to the anarchism of the great classics, but
also to the active groups of the Jura Mountain Federation and to
anarcho-syndicalism. I do not refer to mutualism, a rather deviant
branch of anarchism. I donât wish to reject the nihilists and the
violent anarchists, but they pose a complementary (not central) problem
in the relationship between Christianity and anarchism. The problem of
violence is essentially a problem of means, not of the focal point of
the question: an-arche, the absence of authority.)
T0 this there should be added of course all the texts of Proudhon on
authority (God being the one on whom all authorities rest) on the
formula of laws copied from the Decalogue (containing the general idea
of the revolution) and on the Churchâs role denying the freedom of
inquiry. On the other hand, the entire scientific position taken by the
anarchists of the second half of the nineteenth century should also be
taken into account. They sought to prove the non-existence of God,
beginning with the developments in science. (For example S. Faure, R.
Reclus.)
But all this is relatively unimportant. What strikes me in this
anarchist affirmation against God, religion and Church is its
circumstantial, dated character. It seems to me that their reproaches
and attacks are tied to precise events in the history of Christianity.
At the center of Christian theology is the confession of God. Since the
thirteenth century many Christian theologians have insisted on the
attributes of Godâs power. God is, above all and exclusively, the
All-Powerful, the King, the Absolute Autocrat, the radical Judge, the
terrible One. When anarchism declares, âneither God nor masterâ, this
God is the target. He is in effect the one who precludes human freedom:
we are but toys in Godâs hands; we have no possibility to be; we are
damned a priori. One can understand that a doctrine which affirms
humanityâs dignity cannot accept that. In the final analysis, it is the
Creator who not only is at the beginning but who regulates everything,
who distributes both the good and the bad, misfortunes and blessings.
It is very mange that the Biblical God, the God of Jesus Christ, could
have been so deformed. Jesus, who claims kinship with Yahweh chose the
life of non-power, radically so. The God of Jesus chose to be revealed
to the world by an incarnation in the infant in Bethlehemâs stables. So
the definition of the biblical Godâs incarnation in our time and space,
our history, is love. From the Exodus, the action of this biblical God
is liberation: God is above all and foremost our liberator. If God
condemns sin and the powers of evil, it is because they are alien to us.
10 the Old Testament, where the power of God is often stark, this power
is never, never mentioned alone: every proclamation of power is
associated with and often encompassed by a proclamation of love and of
pardon, an exhortation to reconciliation, and an affirmation that this
power of God works in our favor, never against us. It is as false to
present the biblical God as the All-Powerful One as it is to paint God
as an old bearded gentleman sitting on clouds. Yet when I say this I
refuse to go through the same shennanigans of the death-of-God
theologians, who annul ninety-nine percent of the biblical text which,
cultural or not, does not cease speaking primarily of God. It is Godâs
life, not our experience, which is the center of the Biblical message. I
restrict myself here to rehabilitating the Biblical text from a classic
theological distortion.
I shall not spend much time on a second point: the confusion between
religion and revelation, or between religion and Christian faith. All
that is becoming known well enough. It is quite true that the anarchist
critics of religion (âopium of the people,â etc .... Marxâs formula,
which was much more strongly presented by the anarchists) are accurate
about religion. But they fail to touch the essentials of the Christian
faith.
Thirdly, it is accurate to say that in Christianity, âin its historical
expression of religion the All-Powerful God-became the support of
established order. Here again we encounter an extreme deviation, due in
part to the institutionalization of the Church, which ceases to be the
assembly of the faithful, of people united by the sole tie of love and
becomes insteadâ âorganizationâ and consequently âpower.â This deviation
is also due in pan to dogma becoming dogmatism. It is a problem at
hardening on both sides. Truth possessed (which thereby ceases to be
truth) leads to judgment and condemnation. Love institutionalized
produces authority and hierarchy. And although the Church was no doubt
once a happy and joyous consequence for people who-assured of their
salvation-united to manifest Godâs love, it became a structure
possessing authority and truth and claims to represent Godâs power on
earth. âNo salvation outside the Churchâ means, first, that all those
who acknowledge being saved by Jesus Christ assemble to return thanks
(that is, outside of Him there are no people who live their faith!).
This then comes to mean that all those who are outside the structure of
the Church are damned! A grave inversion.
Finally it is quite true that the Church became the support of the
establishment, of political powers and of social organizations. We all
know those points when the Church turns coat time and again to
accomodate the reigning authority and to become the strongest ally of
any government-provided that that government has become legitimate in
the judgment of the world. While this was not always true, it is true
more often than. not. One also knows the monstrous uses made of
Christianity by the bourgeoisie to maintain the social order and to keep
the workers subjugated.
All these errors, deformations, heresies (oh yes! heresies!) and
deviations bordering on anti-Christianity have always existed as ways to
interpret biblical revelation. They were accentuated after the
Reformation, and became dominant in the eighteenth century. In other
words, the dominant event is the bourgeoisieâs transformation of
theology, Church and Church-society relationship. The anarchistsâ
attacks on God, the Church and religion are strictly correct, on
condition that the God in question was the God remodeled by this very
particular theology of Church-became-Power. and by the peculiar and
capricious association of Church and social and political power
following the sixteenth century. This theology to support this
Church-State relationship is in no way an expression of biblical
Christianity: indeed it is a contradiction. The roots are, rather, time
after time in the theological heresy of a God conceived exclusively as
the All-Powerful. The error of the anarchists and of Marx was to believe
that they were face to face with Christianity itself, whereas they
encountered merely its bourgeois metamorphosis. By adhering to this
judgment they have overvalued those very features-be they in the early
Church or during the Middle Ages-which confirm their point of view,
instead of considering them only one among many other possibilities. For
example, the death of Ananias and Sapphira are evidence that the
apostles were terrible dictators. The 10quisition became the symbol for
the medieval church. The construction of cathedrals was seen as the
symbol for the enslavement of poor people crushed by the clergy.
Everything that was real regarding love and joy and Christian freedom
the anarchists overlooked, joyfully. In other words, the
anarchists-justly fighting against the Christian totalitarianism and
authoritarianism of the seventeenth to the nineteenth centuries-had a
totally false view of the fundamental reality of Christianity and the
God of Jesus Christ. Our task now is to rectify this anarchist error.
The absence of God, atheism, is in no way an essential condition of
anarchism. The presence of the God of Jesus Christ is the essential
condition for the deliverance of humanity. Negating and banishing the
God of Jesus Christ is the failure of all of our so-called liberating
revolutions, which each time ends with greater enslavement. When left to
ourselves and not given a manifestation of freedom, an experience of
freedom, and a point of departure for freedom which radically transcends
us, we inevitably produce our own slavery. Freedom conquered by humanity
becoming absolute is the ineluctable establishment of dictatorship. Only
when we are related-that is, relative, not claiming equality to the
Transcendent, are we truly human. Only then are we bestowed the gift of
freedom which relatives all our pretentions and therefore our efforts to
dominate each other. But being relative, that is, human, cannot occur
unless we meet the Eternal not on our terms but on the terms of the
Eternal. We can never, in other words, make ourselvesâ ârelativeâ to the
Transcendent so long as we insist on the absolute proclamation of Our
Kingdom. We receive our humanity from the Transcendent, freeing love of
the God of Jesus Christ. We shall return to this point in our final
section.
The deviation from Christianity gave the anarchists an opportunity for
an accurate and telling critique. But they never understood that their
attack was against a deviation, not the reality (even though sometimes a
lived reality!) or the truth of the biblical revelation. Rather, they
challenged a socio-theological formulation of God and not the God of the
Bible and of Jesus Christ. I maintain that there is the God of the Bible
and of Jesus Christ.
We must now examine the other side. We begin with the biblical data.
What does the Old Testament teach about political power?
On the one hand, political power per se is always contested referring to
Nations. The regular theme is: these kings, they are gods, idols. They
will be destroyed as testimony to their weakness. At the time of the
Babylonian captivity, for example, when the prophets say that the people
of Israel should work for the good of the society in which they now find
themselves, there was no question of supporting the king of Babylon. The
kings of Assyria and Egypt are considered instruments manifesting Godâs
wrath; they themselves have no legitimacy whatsoever. Elisha is sent to
anoint the new king of Syria; this means only that this king will be
Godâs scourge to chastise Israel. This king in no way profits from any
alliance with or support from Elisha. (Cf. my Politics of God, Politics
of Man.) Never does the government of a foreign people appear legitimate
or salutary. At best the government is a necessity. There is no
alternative. The only relation to political authorities is that of
conflict. Nothing but persecution, war, devastation, famine and evil can
be expected from these kings. Joseph and Daniel are the only two
examples of collaboration between a representative of Israel and these
foreign kings. But one should not forget that Joseph, who draws his
brothers into Egypt, has by his success produced only the slavery of the
whole of Israel! (It doesnât matter if the facts are accurate! We are
studying here only the way Israel depicts political authority in
Scripture. The complete evolution must be considered: it is only after
receiving a âfavorâ or after a temporary âallianceâ that Israel is
inevitably led into slavery, domination and ruin).
The second example is Daniel. (The same observation obtains: it doesnât
matter if Daniel never existed and that the story is pure fiction:
indeed that would make the narrative even more illustrative!) Daniel,
great visionary and interpreter of dreams is in favor of Nebuchadnezzar,
but the hazards of such favor are known: because he-does not bow before
the king on the subject of faith, he is thrown into the fiery furnace
(authority must make itself adored!).
[Excursus: It must also be noted that Joseph, as well as Daniel, has
been called into the presence of authority for very ambiguous reasons:
both are the kingâs diviners. The authority considers them to have a
relation to a mysterious power (and not at all to the truth) and so
considers them to be capable of enlightening political authority through
magic and sorcery. In other words, Godâs gift is monopolized and
transformed into its opposite. Political authority cannot recognize the
true God for what He is. [t can only use Him accidentally for its own
reinforcement. What a strange spotlight on the alliance between Church
and State in the modern era.]
Darius throws him into the lionâs pit: authority is indeed dangerous and
devouring. To participate in political action and reflection on the
governmental level is an enterprise which necessarily endangers true
faith, and otherwise can lead only to the proclamation of the end of
political authority, to its destruction. One must not forget that Daniel
prophesied nothing but misfortune to the various kings he served. To
each he announced the end of the reign, the destruction of the kingdom,
the death of the king, etc. Consequently, Daniel is the negator of
authority even while serving that authority temporarily.
One could say that all this can be explained by the fact that the people
in question are âNationsâ -enemies of Israel, peoples not elected by
God, pagans and idolaters-and that Israelâs wholly negative judgment on
these authorities was an obvious one.
So we must now examine the monarchy in Israel. I have written about the
significance of the monarchy (Cf. particularly, âLa conception du
pouvoir en Israel,â in Melanges en lâhonneur de M. Brethes de la
Gressaye (1968).) Not to repeat this study, I shall indicate the main
outlines and conclusions.
The principal text is certainly the institution of the monarchy in I
Samuel 8. Prior to these events Israel was a people without political
organization, âgoverned directly by God.â Whenever necessary, God sent a
âjudgeâ as a temporary, charismatic, occasional chief. But Israel
demanded organization, a political authority, a king in order to become
more efficient, to be more like other peoples who had kings. Samuel
fights longtime to prevent this treason against God. But God ends up
giving in to His peopleâs disobedience, declaring, âBy giving themselves
a king they have rejected me.â The recital is very detailed and complex,
but it can be broken down into three component pans: political authority
rests on defiance; it is a rejection of God; it can only be dictatorial,
abusive and unjust (Cf. II Samuel 8:10â18).
Political authority is established in Israel in conformity with and
imitation of the surrounding environment. The first king is Saul, the
mad, the delirious king. God, by His grace and as an exception, chooses
David to succeed Saul, and makes David His representative. But this is a
single ray of light attesting to the fact that God can draw miraculous
good from human evil, for Solomon, admirably suited for exercising
power, ends by being radically corrupted by power. His accumulation of
riches and women, his construction of independent political power, his
creation of cities, etc.. are considered the normal components of
political authority. But they are also elements of Solomonâs alienation
from God and they finally produce his rejection, with clear indications
that it was the exercise of political power that corrupted this man who
was originally so wise, good and humble.
Finally, two distinctive features must be mentioned. The Chroniclesâ
account of the succession of the kings of Israel and Judea give a very
strange evaluation of authority. All those kings who, according to
objective history, were âgreatâ kings are systematically (and I insist
on this systematically: it is indeed the sense of the evaluation of
political authority, even more significant if it does not correspond to
the facts!) presented in the Biblical account as bad kings: idolatrous,
unjust, tyrannical, murderous. These were the kings who set up better
organization, made conquests and enriched the people. In other words,
they exercised their power normally. The judgment ofâ âgoodâ kings is
reserved for those who, historically, were weak, lost their wars, were
bad administrators, lost their wealthâ .This could signify either that
the only authority one can in the end accept is the weakest authority.
or that if a statesman is faithful to God he is necessarily a bad
statesman and vice versa. The consistency of these biblical judgments is
too great to be anything but extraordinary, indeed unique. No nation in
the world has produced a single chronicle or historiography expressing
this orientation. Rather, it is always the successful king who is
everywhere rated great and legitimate.
A final brief comment: detailed analysis of the corona;âion procedures
and of the names used to designate the kings demonstrates that the king
is never anything but the acting. temporary and accidental sign for the
One who is to come. He is defined by this âco comeâ. The king in
coronation festivities has no importance. He is merely a surveying
stake, a stone placed in a waiting position. God delivers political
authority to the degree that it is the preliminary image of the ultimate
perfection of the Messiah and of the kingdom. Political authority never
has any value in and of itself. On the contrary, it is even denied,
challenged and condemned on each occasion it claims to exist either as
political authority or anything else other than a sign of the One to
come. Political authority, in other words, has no other value than that
which it draws from what is to come (an event that will come!) and what
it signifies (which is unknown!) There is no validation of political
power whatsoever in the Old Testament. On the contrary, it is forever
contested.
In the New Testament, two lines of thought can be seen: one favorable to
authority (represented by the famous text from Paul: âthere is no
authority except from Godâ: Romans 13:1), and the other, much larger
one, hostile to authority and represented by the Gospels and Revelation.
It is very strange that, since Constantine, the Church has, in an almost
redundant fashion, based its âtheology of the stateâ on Romans thirteen
and the parallel texts from the Perrine Epistles.
Jesusâ attitude towards political authority in the Gospels is a
radically negative one. He himself refuses to exercise <juridical type
of authority. He counsels his disciples not to imitate the kings of
nations (âkings and governors have dominion over men; let there be none
like that among you ... â). He refuses to become king or to participate
in the political conflicts of history. It is very significant, in this
regard, that there were both Roman âcollaboratorsâ (Matthew) and
Zealots, the violent anti-Roman patriots (Judas, Simon) among his
disciples. He knew quite well the resistance party and refused to join
it. He held political authority up to derision. Consider the famous and
interesting affair of the two coins found in the mouth of a fish, an
occasion to talk about tax. This is the sale and unique miracle of this
type, bordering on the exorbitant, done precisely to demonstrate that
the duty of paying taxes is simply ridiculous I He submits himself to
Caesarâs jurisdiction, giving not one hint of recognition to Caesarâs
legitimacy. Caesarâs is the jurisdiction of power, nothing more.
Two points need to be refined: the famous saying, âRender to Caesar... â
in no way divides the exercise of authority into two realms. It is
incredible to draw from these words the notion that heaven, the
spiritual, the emotions, are Godâs realm, but that Caesar is wholly
qualified to exercise authority over people and things in this world.
Jesusâ words mean no such thing. They were said in response to another
matter: the payment of taxes, and the coin. The mark on the coin is that
of Caesar; it is the mark of his property. Therefore give Caesar this
money; it is his. It is not a question of legitimizing taxes! It means
that Caesar, having created money, is its master. Thatâs all. (Let us
not forget that money for Jesus is the domain of Mammon, a satanic
domain!) As forâ ...that which is Godâs... â: how could a pious Jew in
Jesusâ time possibly understand âthat which is Godâsâ in any way but
everything? God is the Creator, the master of life and death, the one on
whom everything depends. The phrase means: Caesar is legitimate master
of nothing but what he fabricates for himself, and that is the province
of demons!
As for the other formulation, . âMy kingdom is not of this worldâ: this
says explicitly that Jesus will not exercise political authority. But in
no way does it suggest that Jesus recognizes the validity of political
authority. On the contrary. There is the kingdom of God, and all
authority exercised outside of that is wicked and must be denied.
Nevertheless, Jesus does not represent apoliticism or spiritualism. His
is a fundamental attack on political authority. It is not indifference
concerning what politics can be or can do. It is a refusal of politics.
Jesus is not a tender dreamer gliding in the sky âabove politics.â He
challenges every attempt to validate the political realm, and rejects
its authority because it does not conform to the will of God. Indeed,
this is given precise confirmation by the account of the Temptations.
The third temptation in Matthewâs account is the one in which the devil
shows Jesus all the kingdoms of the world and tells him, âI will give
you all these things if you prostrate yourself and adore me.â Jesus
responds with a refusal to adore him.
[Excursus: I am in complete disagreement with the exegetes who wish to
reduce this text to the problem of adoration: that is, what Jesus
rejects is not political power but adoration of Satan....The text is
clear: Jesus does not shatter the rapport between authority and
adoration. He implicitly admits that if he would adore Satan, Satan
would give him all the kingdoms of the earth. Consequently he does not
challenge the satanic character of authority. ]
He does not refute what Satan says. He does not tell him that these
kingdoms and political authorities are not Satanâs. No. On the contrary,
he is in implicit agreement. Satan can give political authority but the
condition for exercising political authority is adoration of the power
of evil. That is the consistent and unique teaching of the Gospels.
This point is carried to its ultimate conclusion in the book of
Revelation. [Cf. my commentary Apocalypse (The Seabuty Press: 1977).]
Here political authority (temporarily represented by Rome, although
Revelation envisions not only the Roman Empire) is the monster that
rises from the sea and perfectly symbolizes political propaganda. But
political authority is also represented at the beginning of Revelation,
with the red knight who holds the sword (his sole function is to wage
war, exercise power and kill) and, at the end of the book, with Babylon,
which at one and the same time concentrates political and financial
power and the administration of the city. We encounter here a consistent
line in the Scriptures of the negation of political authority and
testimony to the fact that it has neither validity ânor legitimacy.
[Excursus: I want to emphasize the fact that the lesson given in this
collection of texts is not a situational one. The first Christians did
not express their anti-politics, their anarchism, because they were
persecuted by or opposed by political authorities. Theirs was a
fundamental stance. Everything is from the beginning centered on the
fact that two political authorities combined to crucify Jesus. How
better express the radicalism of their opposition! If, however, One
maintains that these stances are simply the responses of the first
century Christians to theirâ âsituation in the Roman Empireâ -and
nothing more than that-then everything in the Gospels and in the life of
Jesus must be considered situational! For example, his teaching On the
Law, or the Parables On the Kingdom, etc., is strictly speaking
situation all And the New Testament-indeed the whole of Scripture-is
reduced to a guidebook of ideology and political propaganda, not the
Herald of Good News (the Gospel) for everyone, Christ and Caesar alike.]
In opposition to this, we have the texts of Paulâs letter to the
Christians in Rome and parallel texts in the New Testament. But among
the latter, we must distinguish between those texts which speak only of
praying for authorities (a service to render to them, perhaps linked to
the problem of exousiai, to prevent them from falling into the hands of
demons) and the authorities which demand obedience and submission. At
any event, the only text which seems to offer an over-all basis for
submission to authorities is precisely Paulâs letter to the Christians
in Rome, specifically the early verses of Chapter Thirteen. These
passages, like so many of his writings, seem to me to be Paulâs answer
to a particular circumstance faced by the congregation of Christians in
Rome. (We are reminded of the circumstances confronting Paul with the
congregation in Corinth: eating meat sacrificed to idols, virginity,
etc.) Of course, these texts from Paul, even though they are occasional,
must be seen as bearers of a word of God. But not in a literal way,
certainly not as Paul writes to the Christians in Rome in Chapter 13.
It seems to me that these verses should be placed in the milieu which I
have already described. Specifically: what is the common attitude of the
Christians of the first generation. To reject political authority (not
merely theâ âworshipâ demanded of Caesar) immediately leads to the
refusal, for example, of military service. Paulâs verses seem to me a
reaction against the extremist of the anti-political position, against
an-archĂ©. Paul says âDonât exaggerate, donât take refusal to extremes.
For authority ultimately comes from God who has reduced the magistrate
to the role of servant, even if the magistrate continues the claim as
master.â
The good in society. Paul is saying. is certainly not Godâs word. All
the same, it is not negligible.... and it is guaranteed by the Judge.
Consequently, these words from Paul do lot seemâ to me to offer a basis
forâ âa universal theology of political powerâ granted them in the
history of the Church. Rather, these texts seem to be warning against
the excesses of Christian freedom concerning political power. The
Christian, Paul is saying, does not seek the suppression of all power in
all societies-granted the Christian is free, independent and critical of
political power. The Christian must always proclaim the limited duty of
political power-never accepting it as a divine institution, but also
never judging it, as was done in Paulâs lime, as solely the work of the
devil! Granted that his words are in the context of a specific situation
(Christians in Rome in the first century), Paul gives us an orientation
about the ethics of freedom which remains valid, but not as a
theological foundation of political power. Specifically, we know there
was in the Christian congregations rejection of military or any service
to the Empire. It seems to me important that Paul does not mention this
opposition in these texts to the Christians in Rome when he writes about
political authority. Instead, he grants that Caesar (the magistrate)
holds the sword. But he refuses to say that Christians must or as
Christians are able to hold the sword. To me, this means that the
obedience Paul recommends to political authorities does not go so far as
bearing the sword of the magistrate. That is, Paul accepts the general
opinion of the Church.
Moreover, to this interpretation of Paul in Romans Thirteen. we must add
the reminders which K. Barth and F.J. Leenhardt have offered. The
notorious verses of Romans 13 must be read in the context of the letter
of Paul to the Christians in Rome. That is, in chapter twelve, Paul
speaks of love, and gives in succession a number of applications. He
closes the chapter speaking of love for oneâs enemies (if your enemy is
hungry, feed him, etc.,,) and immediately after the seven verses on
authorities that open chapter thirteen, Paul returns again to the theme
of love, showing how love contains all the commandments. Then he
digresses about the end of time (13: 11â14) and returns to love in
chapter fourteen when he speaks of tolerance of the weak. That is, the
verses on authorities are included in his teaching on love. I would go
so far as to summarize them this way: âLove your enemies. Naturally, we
all believe that the authorities are our enemies, however, we must also
love them.â But as in each case that he studies (the Church, joy,
enemies. the law, the weak in faith, etc.) he gives a specific reason
for this love of the other, he does the same thing for the authorities
and it is in this perspective that he writes the famousâ âthere is no
authority except from God.â Incidentally, Paulâs negative formulation
should be stressed, and not the formulation which has later been given:
omnis potestas a Deo (all power comes from God) which seems to express a
principle I Paul is not expressing a principle. Therefore, this text, in
my opinion, should be reduced to what it is. that is, not the last word
on the question of political authority. but an attempt to apply love in
a Christian setting in which the authorities were hated.
Thus what one can draw from both the New and the Old Testaments is a
fundamental challenge wall political authority. There is no legitimate
political authorityâ as such. Political authority and organization are
necessities of social life but nothing more than necessities. They are
constantly tempted to take the place of God, for the magistrate or king
infallibly regards themselves as authority per se. This power must be
contested, denied and constantly challenged. It becomes acceptable only
when it stays within its humble status, when it is weak, when it serves
the good (which is extremely rareâ) and truly transforms itself into the
servant of humanity (since it is already the servant of God!). But the
customary judgment that .the State is legitimate only when it is not
tyrannical, unjust, violent, etc. is thereby reversed. In reality the
State is illegitimate and must be destroyed unless it is the servant of
all-and truly so, not just as a rhetorical image! â and effectively
protect the good of all.
In this brief essay, I cannot run through the evidence that documents
the complete reversal of the biblical testimony by the Church in
history. Anyway, thatâs wellknown. That aside, the fact is that the
characteristic biblical teaching has never disappeared in the Church,
and this can be documented. res. the Church, transformed into a Power,
taught the contrary. But throughout the history of the Church movements
have appeared that we ought to realize as anarchistic because, beginning
with the anchorites and up to Tolstoy and Berdyaev, they have reaffirmed
the impossibility of the State in a variety of ways. No doubt these
movements seemed bizarre and were considered so especially by the
Church. But they all witnessed to a profound truth about Christianity
(sometimes by heresies exacerbated by the Churchâs opposition): as
anarchists they were not the capricious protestors against this and that
specific authority or this and that particular political corruption.
Rather, they were the representatives of the reaching and even of the
word of God.
Berdyaev seems to have been the last (On The Slavery and the Freedom of
Man, 1938; The Realm of the Spirit and the Realm of Caesar, 1946) to
show the incompatibility between the Gospel and the Scale. He
demonstrates the opposition between the ethics of the Gospel and the
ethics of the Stateâs power: when it is a choice between serving the
State or refusing it, then the State proclaims an ethics that is clearly
contrary to the Gospel. Berdyaev shows the opposition between
responsibility (the center of the Christian life in the world) and
power. He underlines the corruption provoked by political power. He
accepts the wel1known formula: âPower corrupts, absolute power corrupts
absolutely.â The Stateâs salvation and prosperity does not represent the
collective and stil1 less humanityâs salvation and prosperity-such an
identification is an abominable falsehood. Instead, the Stateâs
prosperity always implies the death of innocents. âThe law of the State
is that in âorder to save the State even the innocent must be
sacrificed....The death of a single man from among the least of men is
an event more important and more tragic than the death of a State or an
Empire. It is unlikely that God notices the death of the greatest
kingdoms, but the death of one man does not escape him.... â So
Berdyaev.
The connections between Church and State are one form of the relation of
Christâs spirit to Caesar. But Jesus Christ has put us against the wall
and we must choose, not try co be reasonable, or conciliate! The Church
time and again has committed treason in relation to the State. Becoming
partner to the State it has turned the State into another Church.
Christianityâs sin in history is to have recognized and accepted the
State, no matter what form that State took and no matter who the
incumbent authority. âRecognition of the divine authority of the king is
transformed into recognition of the divine authority of the people,
later into the authority of the proletariat. Sovereignty and the divine
character of power exist in equality!â âIt is the sovereignty of the
State that must be denied.â So Berdyaev.
I have written more than once that there is no fixed Christian position
on political power. In reality, the sale political Christian position
conforms to Revelation: the negation of power, the total, radical
refusal to accept its existence, and the fundamental contesting of
whatever form it takes. And I do not say this because of an orientation
towards a kind of Spiritualism, or an ignorance of politics, an
apoliticism. Certainly notion the contrary. As a Christian one must
participate in the world of politics and of action. But one must do so
to reject it, to confront it with the conscientious and well-founded
refusal that alone can put into question, or even prevent, the unchecked
growth of power. Thus Christians cannot help but be only on the side of
anarchists.
But then, do Christian~bring something peculiar to this partnership?
Something specific? Are Christians like the others, or do they-like the
anarchists-have a particular service to render? In effect, it seems to
me that Christians have an important role to play here, on three
different levels. First of all, anarchists live in illusion because they
think it is possible to effectively abolish authority and to eliminate
successfully all the sources of power. They fight to win, to prevail.
Christians should be more realistic. We live in a world which has always
been subjugated by power in one way or another. I know quite well that
this is not a sufficient argument. One can always begin a new epoch, it
is not necessary to believe that what has always been will always be.
Right. But it is a leap into the unknown. We can no longer believe today
the absolute article of the anarchist creed of the past: the
inevitability of progress. There is no necessary movement from an
inferior to a superior form of society. Nowhere is anarchism, the
society of the free, guaranteed. There is every chance that it will
never be established. But then the anarchist, when told this, Stops in
discouragement and says, âWell, then whatâs the use?â This is the point
the Christian should intervene. When measured against the grace of God,
all human action is strictly relative. Nevertheless, humans must act-not
for absolute success (which can only occur in the Kingdom of God) but
because love expresses itself in the relative. âIf you have been
faithful in the small things, I shall give you the large ones. â That is
the promise given to us.
Bur one must also understand that the love of man and woman, for example
does not reside in the grand, spectacular, ceremonial declarations. or
in the magnificent gestures, or in the erotic paroxysms, but rather in
the thousands of humble signs of concern for the other that
quintessentially express the truth that thou counts for more than I.
Therefore, we must not be discouraged if our anarchist affirmations do
not lead to the anarchist society, do not upset society, do not destroy
all structures. And that too would be a manifestation of power which
could only lead to a very specific restructuring of the authority of
power.
What does all this mean? Simply this: political authority in its essence
tends to grow indefinitely. It has no reason at all to limit itself. No
constitution, no ethics, can prevent political power from becoming
totalitarian. It must encounter, outside itself, a radical negation
based on the opposition of those intending neither to conquer authority
(and so undertake political activity) nor to exercise it for the good of
others (and so be politics). It must be those representing an
intransigent moral conscience and an effective force of opposition. The
permanent struggle of this group-which is not a class, not organized in
advance, not a sociological entity-is itself the Struggle for the
freedom of others. There is freedom only with the winning of freedom. No
authority can grant freedom to us. Challenging power is the only means
to bring about the realization of freedom. Freedom exists only to the
extent that this rejection of power is strong enough, and to the extent
one does not allow oneself to be seduced by the idea that surely freedom
will come tomorrow if... No. There is No Tomorrow. Freedom exists Today
or never. It exists when we shake an edifice, produce a fissure, a gap
in the structure where for one moment we can find our always menaced
freedom. But to obtain even a small amount of free play in the interior
of the system one must manifest total and radical rejection. Every
concession to power permits the totality of power to rush in. That is
why the anarchistic position is conceivable. It maintains this free play
which permits freedom. Bur we cannot delude ourselves with the vain hope
of completely destroying this power and of reconstructing an ideal and
fraternal society .... the day after tomorrow!
I already know the anarchistâs disillusioned words, âSo thatâs all it
is! Only that.â Yes! âThatâs all.â That is to say that, today, by our
refusal, we will not permit the crack to be totally refilled so that we
can still breathe free air. It is the passage from the anarchists
disdainful âonly thatâ to the âthatâs allâ full of hope which the
Christian should allow the anarchist to realize.
There is a second role Christians can play at the anarchistsâ side. For
most anarchists, people are by nature good and are corrupted only by
society or rather by power. If (here be criminals, it is the Stateâs
fault. It would seem necessary to believe in this original goodness of
humanity in order to have hopes of installing an anarchist society. We
must spontaneously act for the good of all, we must not seek to encroach
on the territory or freedom of our neighbor, we must discipline our
passions and our fury, we must be willing to work voluntarily for the
collective, we must not disturb the peace ... otherwise anarchy would be
what it is accused of being: simply a disorder, a frightful war of
individuals. As far as I know, Bakunin is the only anarchist who had the
courage to pose the hypothesis that we are evil, and he drew from it
consequences that are critical to his plan for the organization of
society.
But one must take a further step. One must admit that not only can there
be people occasionally who are nor able to live in anarchy, but, on the
contrary, that we are normally unable to do so. One must stare from this
reality, and here Christians should be the most realistic. It is not
power that leads the subject to wickedness. It is ourselves who want to
be slaves and thus rid ourselves of the difficulty of living and turn to
authority. In so doing we encounter the appetite for power in the other.
The desire to abandon oneself and the will to power are exact
corollaries. It is in this setting of reality that anarchism should be
proclaimed. Again it is their word of hope: ânevertheless, in spite ofâ
âIn spite of this reality about people, we want to destroy power.â Here
is the Christian hope in politics.
Assuredly this is not sufficient. That is, when face to face with the
evil which is in us-not the moral transgressions of disobeying current
morality, but the evil which is a sickness Unto death and which leads us
to be slave and tyrant-there are only two options. Either one organizes
a repressive system which puts everyone in place, which establishes
patterns and norms of behavior, which punishes anyone who oversteps the
boundary of the small amount of freedom doled out. (That is, the
justification for the power of the State.) Or, one works to transform
humanity-the Christian would say conversion-in such a way that renders
us able to live with others and serve others as an expression of
freedom. That is the expression of Christian love, of the love of God
for us manifested in Jesus Christ.
Anarchists have clearly seen the necessity for such a transformation.
They hoped to achieve it through education, through pedagogy, but that
is clearly not enough. The anarcho-syndcalists hoped to achieve it
through battle: the human qualities of virtue, courage, solidarity and
loyalty are forged in combat against authority-a battle to be waged with
the weapons of truth, justice, authenticity (and I would easily add
non-violence). Without these weapons one perverts the fighter and fails
to prepare him to enter the anarchist fraternity.
Yes. But there is need for a more profound motivation. These two
pedagological methods need to root themselves in a more fundamental
truth. A more essential conversion is needed, from which all the rest
becomes possible, and which permits us to be courageous despite all the
setbacks.
This is precisely where the work of the Gospel is found for the
anarchists: the Gospelâs witness that there is a possibility for
freedom-just where the most amorphous, servile of us, or the most
tyrannical, victorious of us-seem to be immune to any change of any
kind. For we too, slave and tyrant, are loved by God in Jesus Christ and
are not outside the possibility of living in the truth God -discloses
before us. I believe that this contribution of the Christian faith is
essential to anarchism, for it reveals a unity in practice along with a
conformation in theory.